A village existed at Tavistock by the tenth century. An important Benedictine abbey was founded there in late Saxon times, and the monks encouraged the settlement’s development, obtaining grants of markets and fairs. Borough status was probably achieved during Henry II’s reign. Located on the western edge of Devon’s tin-mining zone, Tavistock was a stannary town from 1305. In the early Stuart period it was still the county’s busiest centre for coinage, the official processing of tin for sale, even though production in Devon had now significantly declined. At this juncture, the town also boasted thriving markets for corn and cloth, production of the latter commodity having replaced tin as the mainstay of the local economy.
Tavistock first sent representatives to Westminster in 1295, and had a regular voice in the Commons from the mid-fourteenth century. The parliamentary franchise was vested in the freeholders. The election indentures of 1604 and 1620 were made out in the name of the borough’s burgesses only, but subsequent returns invariably also mentioned the bailiff. In both 1620 and 1624 the indentures were signed by at least some of the voters, but ordinarily they simply carried the borough’s seal. The normal practice was for both Members to be returned on a single indenture, but in 1626 separate returns were made, of which only one survives. The borough consistently accepted nominations from external patrons, and, unsurprisingly, its particular concerns were never voiced in the Commons by its representatives.
Tavistock’s principal patrons in the early Stuart period were the Russell family, who had become lords of the manor after the dissolution of the monasteries. They controlled at least one seat in every election. Their only competitor was Francis Glanville*, a local gentleman resident at Kilworthy, a mile from the town, who also owned a significant amount of property in the borough.
In 1617 the earl made over the bulk of his estates to his heir-presumptive, Sir Francis Russell*, who henceforth exercised his family’s patronage at Tavistock. Glanville again took the senior seat in 1621, when he was partnered by Sir Baptist Hicks, who probably owed his place to the mediation of Lady Russell’s cousin, the 5th Lord Chandos (Grey Brydges†).
in the freeholders
Number of voters: at least 16 in 1624
